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Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output 1 Chapter 3 Formatted Input/Output.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output 1 Chapter 3 Formatted Input/Output."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output 1 Chapter 3 Formatted Input/Output

2 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output The printf Function The printf function must be supplied with a format string, followed by any values that are to be inserted into the string during printing: printf( string, expr1, expr2, …); The format string may contain both ordinary characters and conversion specifications, which begin with the % character. A conversion specification is a placeholder representing a value to be filled in during printing. –%d is used for int values –%f is used for float values 2

3 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output The printf Function Ordinary characters in a format string are printed as they appear in the string; conversion specifications are replaced. Example: int i, j; float x, y; i = 10; j = 20; x = 43.2892f; y = 5527.0f; printf("i = %d, j = %d, x = %f, y = %f\n", i, j, x, y); Output: i = 10, j = 20, x = 43.289200, y = 5527.000000 3

4 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output The printf Function Compilers aren’t required to check that the number of conversion specifications in a format string matches the number of output items. Too many conversion specifications: printf("%d %d\n", i); /*** WRONG ***/ Too few conversion specifications: printf("%d\n", i, j); /*** WRONG ***/ 4

5 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output The printf Function Compilers aren’t required to check that a conversion specification is appropriate. If the programmer uses an incorrect specification, the program will produce meaningless output: printf("%f %d\n", i, x); /*** WRONG ***/ 5

6 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Conversion Specifications A conversion specification can have the form % m. pX or %- m. pX, where m and p are integer constants and X is a letter. Both m and p are optional; if p is omitted, the period that separates m and p is also dropped. In the conversion specification %10.2f, m is 10, p is 2, and X is f. In the specification %10f, m is 10 and p (along with the period) is missing, but in the specification %.2f, p is 2 and m is missing. 6

7 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Conversion Specifications The minimum field width, m, specifies the minimum number of characters to print. If the value to be printed requires fewer than m characters, it is right-justified within the field. –%4d displays the number 123 as 123. ( represents the space character.) If the value to be printed requires more than m characters, the field width automatically expands to the necessary size. Putting a minus sign in front of m causes left justification. –The specification %-4d would display 123 as 123. 7

8 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Conversion Specifications The meaning of the precision, p, depends on the choice of X, the conversion specifier. The d specifier is used to display an integer in decimal form. –p indicates the minimum number of digits to display (extra zeros are added to the beginning of the number if necessary). –If p is omitted, it is assumed to be 1. 8

9 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Conversion Specifications Conversion specifiers for floating-point numbers: e — Exponential format. p indicates how many digits should appear after the decimal point (the default is 6). If p is 0, no decimal point is displayed. f — “Fixed decimal” format. p has the same meaning as for the e specifier. g — Either exponential format or fixed decimal format, depending on the number’s size. p indicates the maximum number of significant digits to be displayed. The g conversion won’t show trailing zeros. If the number has no digits after the decimal point, g doesn’t display the decimal point. 9

10 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Program: Using printf to Format Numbers The tprintf.c program uses printf to display integers and floating-point numbers in various formats. 10

11 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output tprintf.c /* Prints int and float values in various formats */ #include int main(void) { int i; float x; i = 40; x = 839.21f; printf("|%d|%5d|%-5d|%5.3d|\n", i, i, i, i); printf("|%10.3f|%10.3e|%-10g|\n", x, x, x); return 0; } Output: |40| 40|40 | 040| | 839.210| 8.392e+02|839.21 | 11

12 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Escape Sequences The \n code that used in format strings is called an escape sequence. Escape sequences enable strings to contain nonprinting (control) characters and characters that have a special meaning (such as "). A partial list of escape sequences: Alert (bell) \a Backspace \b New line \n Horizontal tab \t 12

13 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Escape Sequences A string may contain any number of escape sequences: printf("Item\tUnit\tPurchase\n\tPrice\tDate\n"); Executing this statement prints a two-line heading: Item Unit Purchase Price Date 13

14 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Escape Sequences Another common escape sequence is \", which represents the " character: printf("\"Hello!\""); /* prints "Hello!" */ To print a single \ character, put two \ characters in the string: printf("\\"); /* prints one \ character */ 14

15 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output The scanf Function scanf reads input according to a particular format. A scanf format string may contain both ordinary characters and conversion specifications. The conversions allowed with scanf are essentially the same as those used with printf. 15

16 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output The scanf Function In many cases, a scanf format string will contain only conversion specifications: int i, j; float x, y; scanf("%d%d%f%f", &i, &j, &x, &y); Sample input: 1 -20.3 -4.0e3 scanf will assign 1, –20, 0.3, and –4000.0 to i, j, x, and y, respectively. 16

17 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output The scanf Function When using scanf, the programmer must check that the number of conversion specifications matches the number of input variables and that each conversion is appropriate for the corresponding variable. Another trap involves the & symbol, which normally precedes each variable in a scanf call. The & is usually (but not always) required, and it’s the programmer’s responsibility to remember to use it. 17

18 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output How scanf Works scanf tries to match groups of input characters with conversion specifications in the format string. For each conversion specification, scanf tries to locate an item of the appropriate type in the input data, skipping blank space if necessary. scanf then reads the item, stopping when it reaches a character that can’t belong to the item. –If the item was read successfully, scanf continues processing the rest of the format string. –If not, scanf returns immediately. 18

19 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output How scanf Works As it searches for a number, scanf ignores white-space characters (space, horizontal and vertical tab, form-feed, and new-line). A call of scanf that reads four numbers: scanf("%d%d%f%f", &i, &j, &x, &y); The numbers can be on one line or spread over several lines: 1 -20.3 -4.0e3 scanf sees a stream of characters ( ¤ represents new-line): 1¤-20.3¤-4.0e3¤ ssrsrrrsssrrssssrrrrrr ( s = skipped; r = read) scanf “peeks” at the final new-line without reading it. 19

20 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output How scanf Works When asked to read an integer, scanf first searches for a digit, a plus sign, or a minus sign; it then reads digits until it reaches a nondigit. When asked to read a floating-point number, scanf looks for –a plus or minus sign (optional), followed by –digits (possibly containing a decimal point), followed by –an exponent (optional). An exponent consists of the letter e (or E ), an optional sign, and one or more digits. %e, %f, and %g are interchangeable when used with scanf. 20

21 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output How scanf Works When scanf encounters a character that can’t be part of the current item, the character is “put back” to be read again during the scanning of the next input item or during the next call of scanf. 21

22 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output How scanf Works Sample input: 1-20.3-4.0e3¤ The call of scanf is the same as before: scanf("%d%d%f%f", &i, &j, &x, &y); Here’s how scanf would process the new input: –%d. Stores 1 into i and puts the - character back. –%d. Stores –20 into j and puts the. character back. –%f. Stores 0.3 into x and puts the - character back. –%f. Stores –4.0 × 103 into y and puts the new-line character back. 22

23 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Ordinary Characters in Format Strings When it encounters one or more white-space characters in a format string, scanf reads white- space characters from the input until it reaches a non-white-space character (which is “put back”). When it encounters a non-white-space character in a format string, scanf compares it with the next input character. –If they match, scanf discards the input character and continues processing the format string. –If they don’t match, scanf puts the offending character back into the input, then aborts. 23

24 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Ordinary Characters in Format Strings Examples: –If the format string is "%d/%d" and the input is 5/96, scanf succeeds. –If the input is 5/96, scanf fails, because the / in the format string doesn’t match the space in the input. To allow spaces after the first number, use the format string "%d /%d" instead. 24

25 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Confusing printf with scanf Although calls of scanf and printf may appear similar, there are significant differences between the two. One common mistake is to put & in front of variables in a call of printf : printf("%d %d\n", &i, &j); /*** WRONG ***/ 25

26 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Confusing printf with scanf Incorrectly assuming that scanf format strings should resemble printf format strings is another common error. Consider the following call of scanf : scanf("%d, %d", &i, &j); –scanf will first look for an integer in the input, which it stores in the variable i. –scanf will then try to match a comma with the next input character. –If the next input character is a space, not a comma, scanf will terminate without reading a value for j. 26

27 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Confusing printf with scanf Putting a new-line character at the end of a scanf format string is usually a bad idea. To scanf, a new-line character in a format string is equivalent to a space; both cause scanf to advance to the next non-white-space character. If the format string is "%d\n", scanf will skip white space, read an integer, then skip to the next non-white-space character. A format string like this can cause an interactive program to “hang.” 27

28 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Program: Adding Fractions The addfrac.c program prompts the user to enter two fractions and then displays their sum. 28

29 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output addfrac.c /* Adds two fractions */ #include int main(void) { int num1, denom1, num2, denom2, result_num, result_denom; printf("Enter first fraction: "); scanf("%d/%d", &num1, &denom1); printf("Enter second fraction: "); scanf("%d/%d", &num2, &denom2); result_num = num1 * denom2 + num2 *denom1; result_denom = denom1 * denom2; printf("The sum is %d/%d\n",result_num, result_denom) return 0; } 29

30 Chapter 3: Formatted Input/Output Sample program output: Enter first fraction: 5/6 Enter second fraction: 3/4 The sum is 38/24 Program: Adding Fractions


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